cover image Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Party Band Saved Heavy Metal

Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Party Band Saved Heavy Metal

Greg Renoff. ECW Press (Legato, U.S. dist. Jaguar, Canadian dist.), $18.95 trade paper (372p) ISBN 978-1-77041-263-7

Most accounts of major bands focus on the fame and fortune of rock stardom. By contrast, Renoff (The Big Tent) covers America’s preeminent hard rock act in the years before they became famous. He argues that Van Halen “transformed the staid sound of metal into something that sounded fresh and vibrant” by fusing essential metal elements, such as heavy rhythms and guitar virtuosity, with monster hooks and soul-inspired grooves. Renoff charts Van Halen’s earliest years playing in the garages, gymnasiums, and backyards of suburban Pasadena, Calif. Drawing on many interviews with band associates, he details how drummer Alex Van Halen and his guitar prodigy brother, Eddie, hooked up with born showman “Diamond” David Lee Roth and bass maestro Michael Anthony to become California legends. Armed with a bottomless well of confidence and “impossibly tight pants,” Roth led Van Halen to the top of the Pasadena backyard party circuit, building a following that helped the band score a record deal and, eventually, rock immortality. Renoff’s book is a thoroughly entertaining read that will appeal to every hard rock fan. [em]Agent: Bob Diforio, D4EO Literary Agency. (Oct.) [/em]